Patanjali's concept of avidya—ignorance or fundamental misperception of reality—as the root cause of trauma's distorted cognitions and beliefs processed through EMDR.
Avidya, often translated as ignorance, is Patanjali's deepest root of suffering. It refers not to lack of information but to fundamental misperception: seeing permanence in impermanence, self in non-self, or threat where none exists. Trauma creates and intensifies avidya: the mind develops false beliefs ("I am unsafe", "People cannot be trusted", "I am broken") that feel absolutely true. These traumatic cognitions operate beneath conscious awareness, filtering all perception. EMDR targets avidya by accessing the traumatic memory during bilateral stimulation, allowing the brain to reprocess it and generate more accurate, adaptive cognitions. The person begins to see the past as past, threat as resolved, and themselves with greater accuracy. Patanjali teaches that avidya can be dissolved through direct experience and perception. EMDR accomplishes this by facilitating the brain's innate capacity to update traumatic memories with present-moment reality. As avidya dissolves, trauma's distorted worldview gradually gives way to clearer perception.
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